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Joseph Testagrose
September 25th 15, 01:36 PM

Bob (not my real pseudonym)[_2_]
September 26th 15, 07:36 AM
Looks almost Buck Rogers-ish...

Andrew Chaplin
September 26th 15, 03:59 PM
"Bob (not my real pseudonym)" > wrote in
:

>
> Looks almost Buck Rogers-ish...

More "Thunderbirds" (as in the puppet show, not the USAF) to me.
--
Andrew Chaplin
SIT MIHI GLADIUS SICUT SANCTO MARTINO
(If you're going to e-mail me, you'll have to get "yourfinger." out.)

Jess Lurkin[_10_]
September 26th 15, 09:44 PM
Charles Lindbergh > wrote in
:

> On Sat, 26 Sep 2015 09:59:42 -0500, Andrew Chaplin
> > wrote:
>
>>"Bob (not my real pseudonym)" > wrote in
:
>>
>>>
>>> Looks almost Buck Rogers-ish...
>>
>>More "Thunderbirds" (as in the puppet show, not the USAF) to me.
>
> I think you are both right, but it reminds me more of a Howell torpedo
> with wings and wheels.
>
> =ybegin line=128 size=217702 name=Howell_torpedo.jpg
>
> Attachment decoded: Howell_torpedo.jpg
> =yend size=217702 crc32=6b22c9ed


While on this subject, it makes me wonder about the cockpit
windscreens... those smallish rectangular styles that stayed
with the Brits way too long.

What gets me to wondering is that the very old joke/story about
testing windscreens. Firing an air-cannon - dead turkey as ammo
versus firing a frozen turkey. The Brits always try to dump that
on the U.S. But these little pilot peepholes really make me think
it was the Brits that pulled that boner.

Anyone want to nail that story down? Urban legend?

Andrew Chaplin
September 27th 15, 04:00 PM
Jess Lurkin > wrote in :

> While on this subject, it makes me wonder about the cockpit
> windscreens... those smallish rectangular styles that stayed
> with the Brits way too long.
>
> What gets me to wondering is that the very old joke/story about
> testing windscreens. Firing an air-cannon - dead turkey as ammo
> versus firing a frozen turkey. The Brits always try to dump that
> on the U.S. But these little pilot peepholes really make me think
> it was the Brits that pulled that boner.
>
> Anyone want to nail that story down? Urban legend?

Apparently urban legend: <http://www.snopes.com/science/cannon.asp>.

I heard of a chicken cannon in use at the National Research Council in Ottawa
in the late 1960s or early 1970s. It is supposed to have been once deployed to
CFB Uplands to engage targets other than windscreens--like an unpopular
officer's car and the like. Alcohol was involved and might be said to be a
contributing factor.
<http://www.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/eng/achievements/highlights/2007/bird_plane.html>
--
Andrew Chaplin
SIT MIHI GLADIUS SICUT SANCTO MARTINO
(If you're going to e-mail me, you'll have to get "yourfinger." out.)

RiŠardo
September 27th 15, 05:36 PM
On 9/27/2015 4:00 PM, Andrew Chaplin wrote:
> Jess Lurkin > wrote in :
>
>> While on this subject, it makes me wonder about the cockpit
>> windscreens... those smallish rectangular styles that stayed
>> with the Brits way too long.
>>
>> What gets me to wondering is that the very old joke/story about
>> testing windscreens. Firing an air-cannon - dead turkey as ammo
>> versus firing a frozen turkey. The Brits always try to dump that
>> on the U.S. But these little pilot peepholes really make me think
>> it was the Brits that pulled that boner.
>>
>> Anyone want to nail that story down? Urban legend?
>
> Apparently urban legend: <http://www.snopes.com/science/cannon.asp>.
>
> I heard of a chicken cannon in use at the National Research Council in Ottawa
> in the late 1960s or early 1970s. It is supposed to have been once deployed to
> CFB Uplands to engage targets other than windscreens--like an unpopular
> officer's car and the like. Alcohol was involved and might be said to be a
> contributing factor.
> <http://www.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/eng/achievements/highlights/2007/bird_plane.html>
>

"Alcohol was involved..." - I find that hard to believe!

;-)

RiŠardo

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